It was deeply satisfying to track my coaching client Stacey G. as she ran the Boston Marathon yesterday. Stacey, a former division 1-A collegiate track runner, hired me to train her for this race after she’d been plagued with overuse injuries in her previous marathon training. Her plan involved a lot of focused running complemented with strength training, plyometrics, drills, swimming, and a weekly ride (now that Boston’s done, she’s making a transition to triathlon, which I know she’ll love). She consistently nailed her workouts, and while there were days when she felt sore and tired and a week when her foot hurt, she made it to Hopkinton free of injury.
GOALS
List your conservative goal:
List your public goal, what you’ll tell friends and coworkers you hope to do:
List your private goal, what you’ll tell your best friends you’d like to make:
List your super-secret radical goal:GEAR
What are you wearing?
What if it’s really cold?
What if it’s really hot?
What’s your anti-chafing plan?PERI-RACE NUTRITON
What do you plan on eating for dinner the night before?
Breakfast on race day?
Afterward?RACE NUTRITON
Please list exactly what you plan to eat and when (either by time or by mile markers).
Ditto for hydration.PACING
What’s the plan?
How will you hold yourself accountable to this plan? (E.g., pace chart tattoo from the expo, stopwatch, GPS, etc.)
How will external factors such as terrain or crowds affect this plan? How will you alter the plan in response?MENTAL STRATEGIES
What mental strategies or tricks do you plan to use in the race?
List your fears about the race, and how you plan to cope should they materialize. Mark each one as either “in my control” or “out of my control.”Include any other contingencies that seem relevant.